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  1. Apr 16, 2014 · Third Person, the upcoming movie written and directed by Haggis, is the filmmaker's return to the inter-weaving narrative thread structure of Crash. It features three stories about couples that are separated by geography (each lives in New York, Paris, and Rome, respectively), but connected through more abstract and/or tangible links. The U.S ...

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  2. Jun 26, 2014 · Somewhere inside " Third Person ," a lifeless, hopelessly overworked romantic melodrama by Paul Haggis ("Crash"), a pretty good movie is trying valiantly to get out. The film opens with Michael ...

  3. Nov 13, 2014 · James Franco is an equally preposterous painter with a connection to beautiful, troubled Mila Kunis. Meanwhile, well-off Adrian Brody strikes up a tense relationship with Moran Atias, playing a ...

  4. Featuring an award-winning ensemble cast includingLiam Neeson (Schindler’s List), Adrien Brody (The Pianist), James Franco (127 Hours), Olivia Wilde (Rush), Mila Kunis (Black Swan),Kim Basinger (L.A. Confidential) and Maria Bello (A History of Violence). Written and directed by Academy Award®winner Paul Haggis (Best Motion Picture, Crash ...

  5. www.metacritic.com › movie › third-personThird Person - Metacritic

    Jun 20, 2014 · Third Person is told with a frustrating slowness, gradually losing the energy of the three stories. Nevertheless, as I previously said, I liked the performances. Liam Neeson brings a credible and detailed work, while Olivia Wilde equally displays talent and beauty, solidly transmitting her character's extreme changes of attitude.

  6. Synopsis. THIRD PERSON tells three stories of love, passion, trust and betrayal, in a multi-strand story line reminiscent of Paul Haggis's earlier Oscar-winning film Crash. The tales play out in New York, Paris and Rome: three couples who appear to have nothing related but share deep commonalities: lovers and estranged spouses, children lost ...

  7. I am speaking to you about her. ("I" is the speaker, so "I" is in the first person. "You" is the person being spoken to, so "you" is in the second person. "Her" is in the third person.) Whenever you use a noun (as opposed to pronoun like above), then the noun is in the third person. For example: The policeman is speaking to the teacher about Anne.

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